A Faster Way to Detect Heart Attacks

A Faster Way to Detect Heart Attacks

Heart-attack warning: Researchers are testing a nano biochip (shown in blue) made of silicon that could detect heart attacks based on the proteins found in a patient’s saliva. The researchers eventually hope to use the much cheaper stainless-steel versions (round, background). The black pit in the middle acts as micro test tubes where saliva is analyzed.

A newly developed saliva-based test could give physicians and emergency-care technicians a quicker and easier way to diagnose heart attacks. The nano-biochip test, developed at the University of Texas at Austin and supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), measures proteins, or biomarkers, in the saliva that researchers found corresponded with heart attacks.

The nano biochip is a tiny protein microarray about the size of a dime that lies in a larger card. There’s a “mini swimming pool” on the card where the saliva is placed, says John McDevitt, professor of biochemistry at the University of Texas at Austin and principal investigator of the nano-biochip project. The card slides into an analyzer about the size of a toaster, where the fluid is pushed into the nano biochip. Proteins are captured on microbeads; different protein biomarkers become color-coded with fluorescent dyes, letting the analyzer read the levels of each using a video chip (like the ones in digital cameras) that takes pictures at different wavelengths. The result is either a healthy-protein fingerprint or heart-attack fingerprint on the analyzer’s display.

Heart attacks are currently diagnosed by biomarkers in the blood, along with electrocardiograms. But EKGs still miss a large number of heart attacks, particularly those with lesser or atypical symptoms, according to Denis Buxton, a physician and branch chief of advanced technologies and surgery at NIH, who adds that roughly 25 percent of heart attacks are not usually detected by an EKG in an ambulance. And while a blood test done in the hospital increases the accuracy of the diagnosis, such tests require time for the blood to be drawn and analyzed.

Potential biomarkers are harder to detect in saliva than in blood, and this required researchers to develop more-sensitive protein tests. But an easily administered, and therefore faster, saliva test could be beneficial to those suffering from heart attacks, because “damage increases with time [that heart attacks] are not treated,” says Buxton.

The heart attack not picked up by an EKG “is one of the blind spots we’d like to help with,” says McDevitt, adding that the first step would be putting the saliva tests in ambulances, where the analyzer would be next to the EKG and done at the same time. “The combination of both of these is ultimately what diagnoses the patient most accurately,” says McDevitt.

So far, McDevitt’s device has been tested on 59 patients, 29 of whom were heart-attack victims. With EKG measurements alone, the researchers detected only 67 percent of heart attacks, while the EKG and the saliva tests together identified 97 percent of the patients having heart attacks, according to McDevitt. The researchers found 32 proteins that were altered during a heart attack and, of those selected, four that the team decided were the best indicators of a heart attack.